The members of the House gave the pledge
of allegiance to the flag of the United States of America.

The roll was called and the following
members were present:

Acomb

Albright

Anderson

Bahner

Bahr

Baker

Becker-Finn

Bennett

Bernardy

Bierman

Boe

Brand

Carlson, A.

Carlson, L.

Christensen

Claflin

Considine

Daniels

Daudt

Davids

Davnie

Dehn

Demuth

Dettmer

Drazkowski

Ecklund

Edelson

Elkins

Erickson

Fabian

Fischer

Franson

Freiberg

Garofalo

Gomez

Green

Grossell

Gruenhagen

Gunther

Haley

Hamilton

Hansen

Hassan

Hausman

Heinrich

Heintzeman

Her

Hertaus

Hornstein

Howard

Huot

Johnson

Jurgens

Kiel

Klevorn

Koegel

Kotyza-Witthuhn

Koznick

Kresha

Kunesh-Podein

Layman

Lee

Lesch

Liebling

Lien

Lillie

Lippert

Lislegard

Loeffler

Long

Lucero

Lueck

Mahoney

Mann

Marquart

Masin

McDonald

Mekeland

Miller

Moller

Moran

Morrison

Munson

Murphy

Nash

Nelson

Neu

Noor

Nornes

O'Driscoll

Olson

O'Neill

Pelowski

Persell

Petersburg

Pierson

Pinto

Poppe

Poston

Pryor

Quam

Richardson

Robbins

Runbeck

Sandell

Sandstede

Sauke

Schomacker

Schultz

Scott

Stephenson

Sundin

Swedzinski

Tabke

Theis

Torkelson

Urdahl

Vang

Vogel

Wagenius

Wazlawik

Winkler

Wolgamott

Xiong, T.

Youakim

Zerwas

Spk. Hortman

A quorum was present.

Backer, Cantrell, Halverson, Mariani, West
and Xiong, J., excused.

The Chief Clerk proceeded to read the
Journal of the preceding day.There
being no objection, further reading of the Journal was dispensed with and the
Journal was approved as corrected by the Chief Clerk.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1010

REPORTS
OF CHIEF CLERK

S. F. No. 1743 and
H. F. No. 1982, which had been referred to the Chief Clerk for
comparison, were examined and found to be not identical.

Christensen moved that
S. F. No. 1743 be substituted for H. F. No. 1982
and that the House File be indefinitely postponed.The motion prevailed.

REPORTS OF STANDING COMMITTEES AND
DIVISIONS

Carlson, L., from the Committee
on Ways and Means to which was referred:

H. F. No. 142, A bill for an act relating to
military affairs; requiring counties to provide pay differential to employees
while mobilized in the United States military's reserve component; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 471.975.

Reported the same back with the recommendation that the
bill be re-referred to the Committee on Government Operations.

The report was
adopted.

Freiberg from the Committee on
Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 172, A bill for an act relating to
military veterans; establishing POW and MIA Recognition Day; proposing coding
for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 10.

Reported the same back with the recommendation that the
bill be placed on the General Register.

The report was
adopted.

Freiberg from the Committee on
Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 192, A bill for an act relating to
the Metropolitan Council; providing for staggered terms; expanding the
membership of the nomination committee; requiring additional information to be
made publicly available as part of the selection process; clarifying council
member qualifications; requiring new advisory committee; establishing sewer availability charges stakeholder group;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, sections 473.123, subdivisions 2a, 3;
473.127.

Subd. 2a.Terms.Following each apportionment of council districts, as provided under
subdivision 3a, council members must be appointed from newly drawn districts as
provided in subdivision 3a.Each council
member, other than the chair, must reside in the council district represented.Each council district must be represented by
one

Journal of
the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1011

member
of the council.The terms of members end
with the term of the governorare staggered as follows:members representing an odd-numbered district
have terms ending the first Monday in January of the year ending in the numeral
"1" and members representing an even-numbered district have terms
ending the first Monday in January in the year ending in the numeral "3."
Thereafter, the term of each member is
four years, with terms ending the first Monday in January, except that all
terms expire on the effective date of the next apportionment.A member serves at the pleasure of the
governor.A member shall continue to
serve the member's district until a successor is appointed and qualified;
except that, following each apportionment, the member shall continue to serve
at large until the governor appoints 16 council members, one from each of the
newly drawn council districts as provided under subdivision 3a, to serve terms
as provided under this section.The
appointment to the council must be made by the first Monday in March of the
year in which the term ends.

EFFECTIVE
DATE; APPLICATION; TRANSITION.(a)
This section is effective for appointments made on or after January 1, 2022,
and applies in the counties of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott,
and Washington.

(b) Each member serving on the
Metropolitan Council on the effective date of this section shall continue to
serve until the member's successor is appointed and qualified.Thereafter, subject to Minnesota Statutes,
section 473.123, subdivision 3a, the term of each member is four years, with
terms ending the first Monday in January.

Subd. 3.Membership;
appointment; qualifications.(a)
Sixteen members must be appointed by the governor from districts defined by
this section.Each council member must
reside in the council district represented.Each council district must be represented by One member of the
council must represent each council district.

(b) In addition to the notice required by
section 15.0597, subdivision 4, notice of vacancies and expiration of terms
must be published in newspapers of general circulation in the metropolitan area
and the appropriate districts.The
governing bodies of the statutory and home rule charter cities, counties, and
towns having territory in the district for which a member is to be appointed
must be notified in writing.Within
ten days of submitting notice to the secretary of state as required by section
15.0597, subdivision 4, the notice must be provided through electronic means to
the governing bodies of the statutory and home rule charter cities, counties,
and towns having territory in the district for which a member is to be
appointed.Notices must also be provided
to organizations representing the interests of local governments within the
metropolitan area that have notified the secretary of state that they would like
to receive notice.The notices required
by this section must describeinclude a description of the
appointments process and a detailed position description that includes the
required skills, expected time commitment, and connection to the district; and
must invite participation and recommendations on the appointment.

(c) The governor shall create a nominating
committee, composed of seven metropolitan citizens appointed by the
governor, to nominate persons for appointment to the council from districts.Three of the committee members must be
local elected officials.The
governor must appoint five members.The
Association of Metropolitan Municipalities must appoint five members to
represent cities.The Association of
Minnesota Counties must appoint three members to represent counties.

(d) The nominating committee must
actively seek out and encourage qualified individuals to apply for a council
member position.The nominating
committee shall seek input from:

(1) the governing bodies of the
statutory and home rule charter cities, counties, and towns having territory in
the district for which a member is to be appointed; and

(2) organizations representing the
interests of local governments within the metropolitan area.

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(e)
Following the submission of applications as provided under section 15.0597,
subdivision 5, the nominating committee shall conduct public meetings, after
appropriate notice, to accept statements from or on behalf of persons who have
applied or been nominated for appointment and to allow consultation with and
secure the advice of the public and local elected officials.The committee shall hold the meeting on each
appointment in the district or in a reasonably convenient and accessible
location in the part of the metropolitan area in which the district is located.The committee may consolidate meetings.Following the meetings, the committee shall
submit to the governor a list of nomineesthree finalists for
each appointment.The nominating
committee shall publish and provide notice of the names and qualifications of
each of the three finalists in the same manner in which the notice of vacancy
was published and provided.The governor
must not make an appointment until at least 14 calendar days after the names of
the finalists have been published and after the nominating committee has
provided an opportunity for public comment.The governor is not required to appoint from the list but must
consult with the nominating committee before appointing a member not included
in the nominating committee's list of three finalists.If the governor rejects the nominating
committee's three finalists, the governor must, in writing, provide a detailed
explanation of the reasons for the rejection.

(d)(f) Before making an
appointment, the governor shall consult with all members of the legislature
from the council district for which the member is to be appointed.

(e)(g) Appointments to the
council are subject to the advice and consent of the senate as provided in
section 15.066.

(f)(h) Members of the
council must be appointed to reflect fairly the various demographic, political,
and other interests in the metropolitan area and each of the districts.

(g)(i) Members of the
council must be persons knowledgeable about urban and metropolitan affairs.Members must have relevant experience in
areas including, but not limited to, local government, transportation, housing,
environment, and regional development.Members
appointed to the council must be able to meet time commitments required by the
position including attending council meetings, attending community meetings,
and completing other job duties.

(h)(j) Any vacancy in the
office of a council member shall immediately be filled for the unexpired term.In filling a vacancy, the governor may forgo
the requirements of paragraph (c) if the governor has made appointments in full
compliance with the requirements of this subdivision within the preceding 12
months.

EFFECTIVE
DATE; APPLICATION.This
section is effective for appointments made on or after January 1, 2020, and
applies in the counties of Anoka, Carver, Dakota, Hennepin, Ramsey, Scott, and
Washington."

Delete the title and insert:

"A bill for an act relating to the
Metropolitan Council; providing for staggered terms; expanding the membership
of the nomination committee; requiring additional information to be made
publicly available as part of the selection process; clarifying council member
qualifications; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 473.123,
subdivisions 2a, 3."

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be placed on the General Register.

The
report was adopted.

Journal of the House - 21st Day -
Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1013

Moran
from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:

H. F. No. 284, A bill for
an act relating to health care; authorizing the commissioner of health to
review costs for insulin products sold in Minnesota; determining if the cost is
excessive; establishing a maximum level of reimbursement for insulin products
if necessary; appropriating money; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 62J.

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Judiciary Finance and Civil
Law Division.

The
report was adopted.

Lesch from the
Judiciary Finance and Civil Law Division to which was referred:

"(b) By January 15 of each year, a
licensing authority must report the following information to the commissioner
of human services:

(1) the total number of current
licensees overseen by the licensing authority and the total number of
compliance checks performed by the licensing authority in the preceding
calendar year as required under paragraph (a); and

(2) the following information for each
violation found in a retail compliance check required under paragraph (a) that
was performed by the licensing authority in the preceding calendar year:

(i) the name of the licensing
authority;

(ii) the date of the compliance check
at which the violations were found;

(iii) the name and physical address of
the licensee; and

(iv) the number of violations of
sections 609.685 and 609.6855 by that licensee in the past 36 months."

Page 4, line 32, after the comma, insert
"make publicly available the most recent list of licensees provided to
the commissioner under subdivision 8, paragraph (b),"

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Subd. 8.Notice
to commissioner; information shared with commissioner of human services.(a) The licensing authority under
this section shall, within 30 days of the issuance of a license, inform the
commissioner of revenue of the licensee's name, address, trade name, and the
effective and expiration dates of the license.The commissioner of revenue must also be informed of a license renewal,
transfer, cancellation, suspension, or revocation during the license period.

(b) The commissioner of revenue shall,
by January 15 of each year, provide the commissioner of human services with a
list of current licensees and shall provide the following information for each
licensee:name, address, trade name, and
effective date and expiration date of the license."

Renumber the sections in sequence

Amend the title as follows:

Page 1, line 3, after the second
semicolon, insert "adding a provision to municipal license of
tobacco;"

Correct the title numbers accordingly

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from
the Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

Subd. 3.ExceptionWaiver.The commissioner shall grant an
exception to the requirements of this section according to Minnesota Rules,
part 4685.1010, subpart 4, if the health maintenance organization can
demonstrate with specific data that the requirement of subdivision 1 or 2 is
not feasible in a particular service area or part of a service area.(a)
A health maintenance organization may apply to the commissioner of health for a
waiver of the requirements in subdivision 1 or 2 if it is unable to meet those
requirements.A waiver application must
be submitted on a form provided by the commissioner, must be accompanied by an
application fee of $1,000 per county, for each application to waive the
requirements in subdivision 1 or 2 for one or more provider types in that
county, and must:

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(1)
demonstrate with specific data that the requirements of subdivision 1 or 2 are
not feasible in a particular service area or part of a service area; and

(2) include specific information as to
the steps that were and will be taken to address network inadequacy, and for
steps that will be taken prospectively to address network inadequacy, the time
frame within which those steps will be taken.

(b) Using the guidelines and standards
established under section 62K.10, subdivision 5, paragraph (b), the
commissioner shall review each waiver request and shall approve a waiver only
if:

(1) the standards for approval
established by the commissioner are satisfied; and

(2) the steps that were and will be
taken to address the network inadequacy and the time frame for implementing
these steps satisfy the standards established by the commissioner.

(c) A waiver shall automatically expire
after four years and cannot be renewed.Upon
or prior to expiration of a waiver, a health maintenance organization unable to
meet the requirements in subdivision 1 or 2 must submit a new waiver
application under paragraph (a) and must also submit evidence of steps the
organization took to address the network inadequacy.When the commissioner reviews a waiver
application for a network adequacy requirement which has been waived for the
organization for the most recent four-year period, the commissioner shall also
examine the steps the organization took during that four-year period to address
network inadequacy, and shall only approve a subsequent waiver application if
it satisfies the requirements in paragraph (b), demonstrates that the
organization took the steps it proposed to address network inadequacy, and
explains why the organization continues to be unable to satisfy the
requirements in subdivision 1 or 2.

(d) Application fees collected under
this subdivision shall be deposited in the state government special revenue
fund in the state treasury.

Subd. 6.Complaints
alleging violation of network adequacy requirements; investigation.Enrollees of a health maintenance
organization may file a complaint with the commissioner that the health
maintenance organization is not in compliance with the requirements of
subdivision 1 or 2, using the process established under section 62K.105,
subdivision 1.The commissioner shall
investigate all complaints received under this subdivision and may use the
program established under section 62K.105, subdivision 2, to investigate
complaints.

Subd. 7.Provider
network notifications.A
health maintenance organization must provide on the organization's website the
provider network for each product offered by the organization, and must update
the organization's website at least once a month with any changes to the
organization's provider network, including provider changes from in-network
status to out-of-network status.A
health maintenance organization must also provide on the organization's website,
for each product offered by the organization, a list of the current waivers of
the requirements in subdivision 1 or 2, in a format that is easily accessed and
searchable by enrollees and prospective enrollees.

Subdivision 1.Administrative
penalty.The commissioner of health
may, for any violation of statute or rule applicable to a health maintenance
organization, or in lieu of suspension or revocation of a certificate of
authority under section 62D.15, levy an administrative penalty in an amount up
to $25,000 for each violation.In the
case of contracts or agreements made pursuant to section 62D.05, subdivisions 2
to 4, each contract or agreement entered

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into
or implemented in a manner which violates sections 62D.01 to 62D.30 shall be
considered a separate violation.The
commissioner shall impose an administrative penalty of at least $.......per day
that a provider network in a county violates section 62D.124, subdivision 1 or
2, and may take other enforcement action authorized in law but shall not also
impose an administrative penalty under section 62K.105, subdivision 3, for a
violation.In determining the level
of an administrative penalty, the commissioner shall consider the following
factors:

(1) the number of enrollees affected by the
violation;

(2) the effect of the violation on
enrollees' health and access to health services;

(3) if only one enrollee is affected, the
effect of the violation on that enrollee's health;

(4) whether the violation is an isolated
incident or part of a pattern of violations; and

(5) the economic benefits derived by the
health maintenance organization or a participating provider by virtue of the
violation.

Reasonable notice in writing to the health
maintenance organization shall be given of the intent to levy the penalty and
the reasons therefor, and the health maintenance organization may have 15 days
within which to file a written request for an administrative hearing and review
of the commissioner of health's determination.Such administrative hearing shall be subject to judicial review pursuant
to chapter 14.If an administrative
penalty is levied, the commissioner must divide 50 percent of the amount among
any enrollees affected by the violation, unless the commissioner certifies in
writing that the division and distribution to enrollees would be too
administratively complex or that the number of enrollees affected by the
penalty would result in a distribution of less than $50 per enrollee.

Sec. 5.Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 62K.075, is
amended to read:

62K.075
PROVIDER NETWORK NOTIFICATIONS.

(a) A health carrier must provide on the
carrier's website the provider network for each product offered by the carrier,
and must update the carrier's website at least once a month with any
changes to the carrier's provider network, including provider changes from
in-network status to out-of-network status.A health carrier must also provide on the carrier's website, for each
product offered by the carrier, a list of the current waivers of the
requirements in section 62K.10, subdivision 2 or 3, in a format that is easily
accessed and searchable by enrollees and prospective enrollees.

(b) Upon notification from an enrollee, a
health carrier must reprocess any claim for services provided by a provider
whose status has changed from in-network to out-of-network as an in-network
claim if the service was provided after the network change went into effect but
before the change was posted as required under paragraph (a) unless the health
carrier notified the enrollee of the network change prior to the service being
provided.This paragraph does not apply
if the health carrier is able to verify that the health carrier's website
displayed the correct provider network status on the health carrier's website
at the time the service was provided.

Subd. 5.Waiver.(a) A health carrier or preferred
provider organization may apply to the commissioner of health for a waiver of
the requirements in subdivision 2 or 3 if it is unable to meet the statutory
requirements.A waiver application must
be submitted on a form provided by the commissioner, must be accompanied by
an application fee of $1,000 for each application to waive the requirements in
subdivision 2 or 3 for one or more provider types per county, and must:

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(1)
demonstrate with specific data that the requirement of subdivision 2 or 3 is
not feasible in a particular service area or part of a service area; and

(2) include specific information as
to the steps that were and will be taken to address the network inadequacy,
and for steps that will be taken prospectively to address network inadequacy,
the time frame within which those steps will be taken.

(b) The commissioner shall establish
guidelines for evaluating waiver applications, standards governing approval or
denial of a waiver application, and standards for steps that health carriers or
preferred provider organizations must take to address the network inadequacy
and allow the health carrier or preferred provider organization to meet network
adequacy requirements within a reasonable time period.The commissioner shall review each waiver
application using these guidelines and standards and shall approve a waiver
application only if:

(1) the standards for approval
established by the commissioner are satisfied; and

(2) the steps that were and will be
taken to address the network inadequacy and the time frame for taking these
steps satisfy the standards established by the commissioner.

(c) The waiver shall automatically
expire after four years and cannot be renewed.If a renewal of the waiver is sought, the
commissioner of health shall take into consideration steps that have been taken
to address network adequacy.Upon
or prior to expiration of a waiver, a health carrier or preferred provider
organization unable to meet the requirements in subdivision 2 or 3 must submit
a new waiver application under paragraph (a) and must also submit evidence of
steps the carrier or organization took to address the network inadequacy.When the commissioner reviews a waiver
application for a network adequacy requirement which has been waived for the
carrier or organization for the most recent four-year period, the commissioner
shall also examine the steps the carrier or organization took during that
four-year period to address network inadequacy, and shall only approve a
subsequent waiver application that satisfies the requirements in paragraph (b),
demonstrates that the carrier or organization took the steps it proposed to
address network inadequacy, and explains why the carrier or organization
continues to be unable to satisfy the requirements in subdivision 2 or 3.

(d) Application fees collected under
this subdivision shall be deposited in the state government special revenue
fund in the state treasury.

Sec. 7.[62K.105]
NETWORK ADEQUACY COMPLAINTS AND INVESTIGATIONS.

Subdivision 1.Complaints.The commissioner shall establish a
clear, easily accessible process for accepting complaints from enrollees
regarding health carrier or preferred provider organization compliance with
section 62K.10, subdivision 2, 3, or 4.Using
this process, an enrollee may file a complaint with the commissioner that a
health carrier or preferred provider organization is not in compliance with the
requirements of section 62K.10, subdivision 2, 3, or 4.The commissioner shall investigate all
complaints received under this subdivision.

Subd. 2.Commissioner
investigations of provider networks.The commissioner shall establish a program to examine health
carrier and preferred provider organization compliance with the requirements in
section 62K.10, subdivisions 2, 3, and 4.Under this program, department employees or contractors shall seek to
make appointments with a range of provider types in a carrier's or
organization's designated provider network to determine whether covered
services are available to enrollees without unreasonable delay, and shall
examine whether the carrier's or organization's network complies with the
maximum distance or travel time requirements for specific provider types.The commissioner shall develop a schedule to
ensure that all health carriers and preferred provider organizations are
periodically examined under this program, and shall also use this program to
investigate enrollee complaints filed under subdivision 1.

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Subd. 3.Administrative
penalties.The commissioner
shall impose on a health carrier or preferred provider organization an
administrative penalty of at least $.......per day that a provider network
violates section 62K.10, subdivision 2, 3, or 4, in a county.The commissioner may also take other
enforcement actions authorized in law for a violation, except that if the
commissioner imposes an administrative penalty under this subdivision, the
commissioner shall not also impose an administrative penalty under section
62D.17, subdivision 1.The commissioner
shall use the factors in section 62D.17, subdivision 1, to determine the amount
of the administrative penalty, and the procedures in section 62D.17,
subdivision 1, apply to administrative penalties imposed under this
subdivision."

Subd. 3.Coordination
with state-administered health programs.The commissioner shall coordinate the administration of the
MinnesotaCare program with medical assistance to maximize efficiency and
improve the continuity of care.This
includes, but is not limited to:

(1) establishing geographic areas for
MinnesotaCare that are consistent with the geographic areas of the medical
assistance program, within which participating entities may offer health plans;

(2) requiring, as a condition of
participation in MinnesotaCare, participating entities to also participate in
the medical assistance program;

(4) providing MinnesotaCare enrollees, to
the extent possible, with the option to remain in the same health plan and
provider network, if they later become eligible for medical assistance or
coverage through MNsure and if, in the case of becoming eligible for medical
assistance, the enrollee's MinnesotaCare health plan is also a medical
assistance health plan in the enrollee's county of residence; and

(5) establishing requirements and criteria
for selection that ensure that covered health care services will be coordinated
with local public health services, social services, long-term care services,
mental health services, and other local services affecting enrollees' health,
access, and quality of care.; and

Subd. 1a.Loss
ratio standards.(a) Health
plans issued on the individual market must return to enrollees in the form of
aggregate benefits not including anticipated refunds or credits, at least 80
percent of the aggregate amount of premiums earned; calculated on the basis of
incurred claims experience or incurred health care expenses where coverage is
provided by a health maintenance organization on a service rather than
reimbursement basis and earned premiums for the period and according to
accepted actuarial principles and practices.

(b) Health plans issued on the small
employer market, as defined in section 62L.02, subdivision 27, must return to
enrollees in the form of aggregate benefits not including anticipated refunds
or credits, at least 80 percent of the aggregate amount of premiums earned;
calculated on the basis of incurred claims experience or incurred health care
expenses where coverage is provided by a health maintenance organization on a
service rather than reimbursement basis and earned premiums for the period and
according to accepted actuarial principles and practices.

(c) Health plans issued to large
groups, meaning groups with 51 or more covered persons, must return to
enrollees in the form of aggregate benefits not including anticipated refunds
or credits, at least 85 percent of the aggregate amount of premiums earned;
calculated on the basis of incurred claims experience or incurred health care
expenses where coverage is provided by a health maintenance organization on a
service rather than reimbursement basis and earned premiums for the period and
according to accepted actuarial principles and practices.

(d) A health carrier must submit to the
commissioner a report, in a form and manner determined by the commissioner,
evidencing compliance with this section.Information in the report must be aggregated and separated by
individual, small employer, and large group market.The form must be submitted to the
commissioner by June 1 of the year following the last calendar year during
which the health carrier offered individual, small employer, or large group
health plans.

(e) The commissioner shall review
reports for actuarial reasonableness, soundness, and compliance with this
section.If the report does not meet
these requirements, the commissioner shall notify the health carrier in writing
of the deficiency.The health carrier
shall have 30 days from the date of the commissioner's notice to file an
amended report that complies with this section.If the health carrier fails to file an amended report, the commissioner
shall order the health carrier to issue a rebate calculated pursuant to
subdivision 2a.

(f) A health plan that does not comply
with the loss ratio requirements of this section is an unfair or deceptive act
or practice in the business of insurance and is subject to the penalties in
sections 72A.17 to 72A.32.

(g) The commissioners of commerce and
health shall each annually issue a public report listing, by health carrier,
the actual loss ratios experienced in the individual, small employer, and large
group markets in this state by the health carriers that the commissioners
respectively regulate.The commissioners
shall coordinate release of these reports so as to release them as a joint
report or as separate reports issued the same day.The report or reports shall be released no
later than June 1 for loss ratios experienced for the preceding calendar year.Health carriers shall provide to the
commissioners any information requested by the commissioners for purposes of
this paragraph.

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Subd. 2a.Rebate.(a) A health carrier must issue a
rebate to each enrollee if the health carrier's loss ratio does not meet or
exceed the minimum required by subdivision 1a.

(b) The rebate must be in the amount of
the aggregate amount of premiums earned, multiplied by the difference between the loss ratio the health carrier had for
the prior calendar year and the loss ratio required under subdivision 1a.

(c) A health carrier must issue the
rebate under paragraph (b) by August 1 of the year following the prior calendar
year during which individual, small employee, or large group health plans were
offered.

(d) The rebate must be paid in the form
of a lump-sum check or lump-sum reimbursement to persons who are no longer
enrolled in the health plan.The rebate
may be paid either as a lump-sum check, a lump-sum reimbursement, or a direct
deduction to the current plan year's premiums for current enrollees.

Subd. 3a.Minnesota
premium security plan and loss ratio calculations.A health carrier, when demonstrating
compliance with the requirements of this section, shall subtract from incurred
claims or incurred health expenses all reinsurance payments applied for or
received under section 62E.23.The
commissioner, in reviewing this information, shall verify that health carriers
have complied with the requirements of this subdivision."

$368,000 in fiscal year 2019 is appropriated
from the general fund to the commissioner of human services for the medical
assistance program.

EFFECTIVE
DATE.This section is
effective the day following final enactment."

Amend the title as follows:

Page 1, line 3, after the semicolon, insert
"appropriating money;"

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be placed on the General Register.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 684, A bill for an
act relating to health; requesting the Board of Regents of the University of
Minnesota to establish an advisory council on rare diseases; appropriating
money; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 137.

Reported the same back with the following
amendments:

Page 1, line 18, after "diseases"
insert ".At least one physician
appointed under this clause must be a pediatrician"

Page 2, line 22, delete "July"
and insert "September"

Page 2, line 28, delete "September"
and insert "October"

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Journal of the House - 21st Day -
Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1023

Moran
from the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy to which was referred:

H. F. No. 687, A bill for
an act relating to health; providing for synchronization of prescription drug
refills; proposing coding for new law as Minnesota Statutes, chapter 62W.

Reported the same back with the following
amendments:

Page 1, after line 4, insert:

"Section 1. [62Q.528]
DRUG COVERAGE IN EMERGENCY SITUATIONS.

A health plan that provides
prescription drug coverage must provide coverage for a prescription drug
dispensed by a pharmacist under section 151.211, subdivision 3, under the terms
of coverage that would apply had the prescription drug been dispensed according
to a prescription."

Subd. 2.Refill
requirements.Except as provided
in subdivision 3, a prescription drug order may be refilled only with the
written, electronic, or verbal consent of the prescriber and in accordance with
the requirements of this chapter, the rules of the board, and where applicable,
section 152.11.The date of such refill
must be recorded and initialed upon the original prescription drug order, or
within the electronically maintained record of the original prescription drug
order, by the pharmacist, pharmacist intern, or practitioner who refills the
prescription.

Subd. 3.Emergency
prescription refills.(a) A
pharmacist may, using sound professional judgment and in accordance with
accepted standards of practice, dispense a legend drug without a current
prescription drug order from a licensed practitioner if all of the following
conditions are met:

(1) the patient has been compliant with
taking the medication and has consistently had the drug filled or refilled as
demonstrated by records maintained by the pharmacy;

(2) the pharmacy from which the legend
drug is dispensed has record of a prescription drug order for the drug in the
name of the patient who is requesting it, but the prescription drug order does
not provide for a refill, or the time during which the refills were valid has
elapsed;

(3) the pharmacist has tried but is
unable to contact the practitioner who issued the prescription drug order, or
another practitioner responsible for the patient's care, to obtain authorization
to refill the prescription;

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1024

(4) the drug is essential to sustain the life of the patient or to continue
therapy for a chronic condition;

(5) failure to dispense the drug to the
patient would result in harm to the health of the patient; and

(6) the drug is not a controlled
substance listed in section 152.02, subdivisions 3 to 6, except for a
controlled substance that has been specifically prescribed to treat a seizure
disorder, in which case the pharmacist may dispense up to a 72-hour supply.

(b) If the conditions in paragraph (a)
are met, the amount of the drug dispensed by the pharmacist to the patient must
not exceed a 30-day supply, or the quantity originally prescribed, whichever is
less, except as provided for controlled substances in paragraph (a), clause (6).If the standard unit of dispensing for the
drug exceeds a 30-day supply, the amount of the drug dispensed or sold must not
exceed the standard unit of dispensing.

(c) A pharmacist shall not dispense or
sell the same drug to the same patient, as provided in this section, more than
one time in any 12-month period.

(d) A pharmacist must notify the
practitioner who issued the prescription drug order not later than 72 hours
after the drug is sold or dispensed.The
pharmacist must request and receive authorization before any additional refills
may be dispensed.If the practitioner
declines to provide authorization for additional refills, the pharmacist must
inform the patient of that fact.

(e) The record of a drug sold or
dispensed under this section shall be maintained in the same manner required
for prescription drug orders under this section."

Renumber the sections in sequence

Amend the title as follows:

Page 1, line 2, delete everything after the
first semicolon and insert "modifying sections relating to prescription
drug coverage and refills;"

Correct the title numbers accordingly

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1025

Delete
everything after the enacting clause and insert:

"Section 1.[152.38]
CANNABIS TASK FORCE.

Subdivision 1.Establishment;
purpose.(a) The Cannabis
Task Force is established to advise the legislature on the legal and policy
issues associated with the legalization, taxation, and regulation of cannabis
production, sale, and use by those 21 years of age or older in the state.

(b) It is not the purpose of this task
force to provide a recommendation on whether or not to legalize cannabis.The purpose of this task force is to gather
facts and report them to the legislature.

Subd. 2.Membership.(a) The Cannabis Task Force consists
of:

(1) two senators appointed by the
president of the senate;

(2) two senators appointed by the
minority leader of the senate;

(3) two members of the house of
representatives appointed by the speaker of the house;

(4) two members of the house of
representatives appointed by the minority leader of the house of
representatives;

(5) the commissioner of agriculture or
a designee;

(6) the commissioner of health or a
designee;

(7) the commissioner of public safety
or a designee;

(8) the attorney general or a designee;

(9) the state public defender or a
designee;

(10) the commissioner of revenue or a
designee;

(11) the commissioner of labor and
industry or a designee;

(12) the commissioner of human services
or a designee;

(13) the commissioner of commerce or a
designee;

(14) eight members appointed by the
governor who have relevant knowledge and experience, including:

(i) one person with experience working
in the medical cannabis industry;

(ii) one person with experience with
enforcement of the state's medical cannabis laws;

(iii) one person with expertise in the
treatment of substance abuse disorder;

(iv) one medical cannabis patient;

(v) one person directly involved in the
cultivation and distribution of medical cannabis in Minnesota;

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of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1026

(vi) one person with experience working in public health policy;

(vii) two persons from separate
noncannabis industry organizations who advocate for cannabis legalization; and

(viii) one person previously
incarcerated in a Minnesota correctional facility;

(15) one person who is an elected
official in a statutory or home rule charter city appointed by the League of
Minnesota Cities;

(16) one medical doctor appointed by
the Board of Medical Practice;

(17) one person who is an elected
county official or administrator appointed by the Association of Minnesota
Counties;

(18) one person who is a defense
attorney appointed by the Minnesota Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers;

(19) one person who is a county
attorney appointed by the Minnesota County Attorneys Association;

(20) one person who is a sheriff
appointed by the Minnesota Sheriff's Association;

(21) one person who is a chief of
police appointed by the Minnesota Chiefs of Police Association; and

(22) one rank and file peace officer
appointed by the Minnesota Police and Peace Officers Association.

(b) Members shall serve without
compensation.

Subd. 3.Organization.(a) The commissioner of health or the
commissioner's designee shall convene the first meeting of the task force.

(b) The task force shall meet monthly
or as determined by the chair.

(c) The members of the task force shall
elect a chair and other officers as the members deem necessary.

(3)
state and local regulation of cannabis growth, processing, transport,
packaging, labeling, sale, possession, and use;

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of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1027

(4) federal law, policy, and regulation of cannabis;

(5) education of the public on
scientific knowledge of the effects of cannabis, especially with regards to use
by minors;

(6) funding for, and provision of,
treatment to persons with substance abuse disorder as it relates to cannabis;

(7) expungement and pardon of nonviolent
marijuana convictions;

(8) security of cannabis retail and
manufacturing locations and the safe handling of proceeds from cannabis sales,
including banking options;

(9) policies that promote access to the
legal cannabis market to persons from communities that are disproportionately
impacted by the ban on cannabis including incentives for minority-owned
businesses to participate in the cannabis industry;

(10) statutory and policy changes
designed to discourage operating motor vehicles while under the influence of
cannabis; and

(11) recommendations to the legislature
and others about necessary and appropriate actions related to legalization of
cannabis in the state.

Subd. 6.Report.By January 1, 2020, the task force
shall submit a report to the chairs and ranking minority members of the senate
and house of representatives committees and divisions having jurisdiction over
health, human services, revenue, public safety, labor and industry, and
agriculture policy and finance that details the task force's findings regarding the legalization of cannabis
including the comprehensive plan developed pursuant to subdivision 5.

Subd. 7.Expiration.This section expires the earlier of
January 1, 2020, or the date the report is submitted under subdivision 6.

EFFECTIVE
DATE.This section is
effective the day following final enactment.

Sec. 2.APPROPRIATION.

$100,000 in fiscal year 2019 is
appropriated from the general fund to the commissioner of health for the
Cannabis Task Force.This appropriation
is available until January 1, 2020."

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

(2) holds a current active license to
practice public accounting under this chapter with a license status of active,
inactive, or exempt under Minnesota Rules, part 1105.3700;

(3) declares that he or she is not
practicing public accounting in any jurisdiction;

(4) was in good standing with the board
at the time the person last held a license under this chapter; and

(5) submits an application for retired
status on a form provided by the board.

Subd. 2.Retired
status effect.Retired status
is an honorific status.Retired status
is not a license to engage in the practice of public accounting.A person granted retired status shall not
perform or offer to perform services for which a license under this chapter is
required.

Subd. 3.Documentation
of status.The board shall
provide to a person granted retired status a document stating that retired status
has been granted.

Subd. 4.Representation
to the public.A person
granted retired status may represent themselves as "Certified Public
Accountant - Retired," "CPA - Retired," "Retired Certified
Public Accountant," or "Retired CPA," but shall not represent
themselves or allow themselves to be represented to the public as a current
licensee of the board.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1029

Subd. 5.Continuing
education not required.A
person is not required to comply with the continuing education requirements in
section 326A.04, subdivision 4, to acquire or maintain retired status.

Subd. 7.Change to active or inactive status.The board shall change a license
status from retired to active or inactive if a person with retired status
requests a status change and meets requirements for reactivation prescribed by
rule."

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from
the Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

"(2) the current office holder has
notified the county board that the officer will not file for the office, as
provided in subdivision 2; or"

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1030

Page
3, line 4, delete "(2)" and insert "(3)"

Page 5, line 9, delete "(2)"
and insert "(3)"

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be placed on the General Register.

The
report was adopted.

Lesch from the
Judiciary Finance and Civil Law Division to which was referred:

H. F. No. 1138, A bill for
an act relating to commerce; providing for digital fair repair; proposing
coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 325E.

Reported the same back with the following
amendments:

Page 4, delete lines 30 and 31 and insert:

"(b) Nothing in this section
applies to manufacturers or distributors of a medical device as defined in the
Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act, codified at United States Code, title 21,
section 301 et seq., or a digital electronic product or software manufactured
for use in a medical setting including diagnostic, monitoring, or control
equipment or any product or service that they offer."

With the recommendation that when so amended
the bill be placed on the General Register.

The
report was adopted.

Carlson, L., from
the Committee on Ways and Means to which was referred:

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from
the Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 1289, A bill for
an act relating to education; authorizing rulemaking for prior written notice
documentation requirements.

Reported the same back with the following
amendments:

Delete everything after the enacting
clause and insert:

"Section 1.PRIOR
WRITTEN NOTICE WORKING GROUP.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1031

(a)
The commissioner of education must appoint a working group by July 1, 2019,
that includes the following:

(1) special education administrators;

(2) special education teachers;

(3) school board members;

(4) parents of children with
disabilities receiving special instruction and services in accordance with
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 125A;

(5) organizations that work with the
parents of children with disabilities; and

(6) Department of Education staff with
expertise in special education compliance.

(b) The commissioner of education must
convene the first meeting of the working group no later than July 15, 2019, and
must provide support and meeting space for the working group.The meetings of the working group are subject
to the requirements of Minnesota Statutes, chapter 13D.

(c) Members of the working group serve
without compensation, but may be reimbursed for allowed actual and necessary
expenses incurred in the performance of the member's duties for the working
group in the same manner and amount as authorized by the commissioner's plan
under Minnesota Statutes, section 43A.18, subdivision 2.

(d) The working group must make
recommendations for improving alignment between state guidance and federal law
requirements on prior written notice by January 15, 2020.The working group must report its
recommendations to the chairs and ranking minority members of the legislative
committees or divisions with jurisdiction over kindergarten through grade 12
education.

(e) This section expires January 16,
2020, or the day after submitting the report required by this section,
whichever is earlier.

EFFECTIVE
DATE.This section is
effective the day following final enactment."

Delete the title and insert:

"A bill for an act relating to
education; establishing a prior written notice working group."

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Education Policy.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 1300, A bill for
an act relating to state government; designating the month of May as Maternal
Mental Health Awareness Month; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapter 10.

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Health and
Human Services Policy.

The
report was adopted.

Journal of the House - 21st Day -
Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1032

Freiberg
from the Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 1414, A bill for
an act relating to education; sexual health curriculum; requiring commissioner
of education to develop a model program; requiring a report; proposing coding
for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 120B.

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 1644, A bill for
an act relating to state government; requiring multiunit residential facilities
to provide access to employees of the United States Census; establishing a
Census 2020 Mobilization Partnership program; appropriating money to support
certain outreach initiatives to encourage participation in the 2020 federal
census.

Reported the same back with the following
amendments:

Page 2, delete subdivision 3 and insert:

"Subd. 3.Compliance
with federal law.A person in
compliance with United States Code, title 13, section 223, and any guidance or
rules adopted by the United States Department of Commerce, Bureau of the
Census, governing access to a facility described in subdivision 1 is considered
to be in compliance with the requirements of this section.

Subd. 4.Applicability.This section is effective from January
1 to July 1 in any year during which a decennial census is conducted under the
authority of the United States Constitution, article 1, section 2."

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Poppe from the
Agriculture and Food Finance and Policy Division to which was referred:

Subd. 3.Industrial
hemp."Industrial hemp"
means the plant Cannabis sativa L.and
any part of the plant, whether growing or not, including the plant's seeds,
and all the plant's derivatives, extracts, cannabinoids, isomers, acids, salts,
and salts of isomers, whether growing or not, with a delta-9
tetrahydrocannabinol concentration of not more than 0.3 percent on a dry weight
basis.Industrial hemp is not marijuana
as defined in section 152.01, subdivision 9."

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be re-referred to the Judiciary Finance and Civil Law
Division.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 1714, A bill for
an act relating to local government; eliminating the Ramsey County Community
Corrections Department; repealing Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 383A.404.

Reported the same back with the following
amendments:

Amend the title as follows:

Page 1, line 2, delete
"eliminating" and insert "repealing the special law for"

With the recommendation that when so
amended the bill be placed on the General Register.

The
report was adopted.

Journal of the House - 21st Day -
Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1035

Freiberg
from the Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 1861, A bill for
an act relating to state government; prohibiting an agency from procuring
supplies or services from persons that fail to disclose as required by federal
law information relating to conflict minerals originating in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo or its neighboring countries; requiring an agency to
provide notice of the prohibition in any solicitation for supplies or services;
proposing coding for new law in Minnesota Statutes, chapter 16C.

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

"(d) An applicant or a recipient of
a grant under subdivision 2, paragraph (a), clause (2), must disclose any
funding from a bank, credit union, or other financial services provider or
vendor whose products or services will be offered at the applicant's or
recipient's VITA or TCE site."

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1039

Subd. 4.Approved
expenditure."Approved
expenditure" means an expenditure made on behalf of a candidate or a
local candidate by an entity other than the candidate's principal
campaign committee of the candidateor the local candidate, if
the expenditure is made with the authorization or expressed or implied consent
of, or in cooperation or in concert with, or at the request or suggestion of
the candidate or local candidate, the candidate's principal campaign
committee, or the candidate's or local candidate's agent.An approved expenditure is a contribution to
that candidate or local candidate.

Subd. 9.Campaign
expenditure."Campaign
expenditure" or "expenditure" means a purchase or payment of
money or anything of value, or an advance of credit, made or incurred for the
purpose of influencing the nomination or election of a candidate or a local
candidate or for the purpose of promoting or defeating a ballot question.

An expenditure is considered to be made in
the year in which the candidate made the purchase of goods or services or
incurred an obligation to pay for goods or services.

An expenditure made for the purpose of
defeating a candidate or a local candidate is considered made for the
purpose of influencing the nomination or election of that candidate or local
candidate or any opponent of that candidate or local candidate.

Except as provided in clause (1),
"expenditure" includes the dollar value of a donation in kind.

"Expenditure" does not include:

(1) noncampaign disbursements as defined
in subdivision 26;

(2) services provided without compensation
by an individual volunteering personal time on behalf of a candidate or a
local candidate, ballot question, political committee, political fund,
principal campaign committee, or party unit;

(3) the publishing or broadcasting of news
items or editorial comments by the news media; or

(4) an individual's unreimbursed personal
use of an automobile owned by the individual and used by the individual while
volunteering personal time.

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Subd. 11.Contribution.(a) "Contribution" means money,
a negotiable instrument, or a donation in kind that is given to a political
committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, local candidate,
or party unit.An allocation by an
association of general treasury money to be used for activities that must be or
are reported through the association's political fund is considered to be a
contribution for the purposes of disclosure required by this chapter.

(b) "Contribution" includes a
loan or advance of credit to a political committee, political fund, principal
campaign committee, local candidate, or party unit, if the loan or
advance of credit is:(1) forgiven; or
(2) repaid by an individual or an association other than the political
committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, local candidate,
or party unit to which the loan or advance of credit was made.If an advance of credit or a loan is forgiven
or repaid as provided in this paragraph, it is a contribution in the year in
which the loan or advance of credit was made.

(c) "Contribution" does not
include services provided without compensation by an individual volunteering
personal time on behalf of a candidate, local candidate, ballot
question, political committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, or
party unit; the publishing or broadcasting of news items or editorial comments
by the news media; or an individual's unreimbursed personal use of an
automobile owned by the individual while volunteering personal time.

Subd. 17c.General
treasury money."General
treasury money" means money that an association other than a principal
campaign committee, party unit, or political committee accumulates through
membership dues and fees, donations to the association for its general
purposes, and income from the operation of a business.General treasury money does not include money
collected to influence the nomination or election of candidates or local
candidates or to promote or defeat a ballot question.

Subd. 18.Independent expenditure."Independent expenditure" means
an expenditure expressly advocating the election or defeat of a clearly
identified candidate or local candidate, if the expenditure is made
without the express or implied consent, authorization, or cooperation of, and
not in concert with or at the request or suggestion of, any candidate or any
candidate's principal campaign committee or agent or any local candidate or
local

Journal of
the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1041

candidate's
agent.An independent expenditure is
not a contribution to that candidate or local candidate.An independent expenditure does not include
the act of announcing a formal public endorsement of a candidate or local
candidate for public office, unless the act is simultaneously accompanied
by an expenditure that would otherwise qualify as an independent expenditure
under this subdivision.

Subd. 27.Political
committee."Political
committee" means an association whose major purpose is to influence the
nomination or election of one or more candidates or local candidates or
to promote or defeat a ballot question, other than a principal campaign
committee, local candidate, or a political party unit.

Subd. 28.Political
fund."Political fund"
means an accumulation of dues or voluntary contributions by an association
other than a political committee, principal campaign committee, or party unit,
if the accumulation is collected or expended to influence the nomination or
election of one or more candidates or local candidates or to promote or
defeat a ballot question.The term
political fund as used in this chapter may also refer to the association acting
through its political fund.

Subdivision 1.When
required for contributions and approved expenditures.An association other than a political
committee or party unit may not contribute more than $750 in aggregate in any
calendar year to candidates, local candidates, political committees, or
party units or make approved expenditures of more than $750 in aggregate in any
calendar year unless the contribution or expenditure is made through a
political fund.

Subd. 2.Commingling
prohibited.The contents of an
association's political fund may not be commingled with other funds or with the
personal funds of an officer or member of the association or the fund.It is not commingling for an association that
uses only its own general treasury money to make expenditures and disbursements
permitted under section 10A.121, subdivision 1, directly from the depository
used for its general treasury money.An
association that accepts more than $1,500 in aggregate in contributions
to influence the nomination or election of candidates or local candidates
or more than $5,000 in contributions to promote or defeat a ballot question
must establish a separate depository for those contributions.

Subd. 2.Penalty.(a) An independent expenditure political
committee or independent expenditure political fund is subject to a civil
penalty of up to four times the amount of the contribution or approved
expenditure if it does the following:

(1) makes a contribution to a candidate,
local candidate, party unit, political committee, or political fund other
than an independent expenditure political committee or an independent
expenditure political fund; or

(2) makes an approved expenditure.

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(b) No other penalty provided in law may be imposed for conduct that is subject
to a civil penalty under this section.

Subdivision 1.Accounts;
penalty.The treasurer of a
political committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, or party
unit must keep an account of:

(1) the sum of all contributions, except
any donation in kind valued at $20 or less, made to the committee, fund, or
party unit;

(2) the name and address of each source of
a contribution made to the committee, fund, or party unit in excess of $20,
together with the date and amount of each;

(3) each expenditure made by the
committee, fund, or party unit, together with the date and amount;

(4) each approved expenditure made on
behalf of the committee, fund, or party unit, together with the date and
amount; and

(5) the name and address of each political
committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, local candidate,
or party unit to which contributions in excess of $20 have been made, together
with the date and amount.

Any individual who knowingly violates this
subdivision is subject to a civil penalty imposed by the board of up to $1,000.

Subd. 4.Independent
expenditures.An individual,
political committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, or party
unit that independently solicits or accepts contributions or makes independent
expenditures on behalf of a candidate or local candidate must publicly
disclose that the expenditure is an independent expenditure.All written and broadcast communications with
those from whom contributions are independently solicited or accepted or to
whom independent expenditures are made on behalf of a candidate or local
candidate must contain a statement in substantially the form provided in
section 211B.04, subdivision 2.The
statement must be on the front page of all written communications and at the
end of all broadcast communications made by that individual, political
committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, or party unit on the
candidate's or local candidate's behalf.

Subd. 3.Contents
of report.(a) The report required
by this section must include each of the items listed in paragraphs (b) to (q)
that are applicable to the filer.The
board shall prescribe forms based on filer type indicating which of those items
must be included on the filer's report.

(b) The report must disclose the amount of
liquid assets on hand at the beginning of the reporting period.

(c) The report must disclose the name,
address, employer, or occupation if self-employed, and registration number if
registered with the board, of each individual or association that has made one
or more contributions to the reporting entity, including the purchase of tickets
for a fund-raising effort, that in aggregate within the year exceed $200 for
legislative or statewide candidates or more than $500 for ballot questions,
together with the amount and date of each contribution, and the aggregate
amount of contributions within the year from each source so disclosed.A donation in kind must be disclosed at its
fair market value.An approved
expenditure must be listed as a donation in kind.A donation in kind is considered consumed in
the reporting period in which it is received.The names of contributors must be listed in alphabetical order.Contributions from the same contributor must
be listed under the same name.When a
contribution received from a contributor in a reporting period is added to
previously reported unitemized contributions from the same contributor and the
aggregate exceeds the disclosure threshold of this paragraph, the name,
address, and employer, or occupation if self-employed, of the contributor must
then be listed on the report.

(d) The report must disclose the sum of
contributions to the reporting entity during the reporting period.

(e) The report must disclose each loan
made or received by the reporting entity within the year in aggregate in excess
of $200, continuously reported until repaid or forgiven, together with the
name, address, occupation, principal place of business, if any, and
registration number if registered with the board of the lender and any endorser
and the date and amount of the loan.If
a loan made to the principal campaign committee of a candidate is forgiven or
is repaid by an entity other than that principal campaign committee, it must be
reported as a contribution for the year in which the loan was made.

(f) The report must disclose each receipt
over $200 during the reporting period not otherwise listed under paragraphs (c)
to (e).

(g) The report must disclose the sum of
all receipts of the reporting entity during the reporting period.

(h) The report must disclose the name, address, and
registration number if registered with the board of each individual or
association to whom aggregate expenditures, approved expenditures, independent
expenditures, and ballot question expenditures have been made by or on behalf
of the reporting entity within the year in excess of

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of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1044

$200,
together with the amount, date, and purpose of each expenditure, including an
explanation of how the expenditure was used, and the name and address of, and
office sought by, each candidate or local candidate on whose behalf the
expenditure was made, identification of the ballot question that the
expenditure was intended to promote or defeat and an indication of whether the
expenditure was to promote or to defeat the ballot question, and in the case of
independent expenditures made in opposition to a candidate or local
candidate, the candidate's or local candidate's name, address, and
office sought.A reporting entity making
an expenditure on behalf of more than one candidate for state or legislative
officeor local candidate must allocate the expenditure among the
candidates and local candidates on a reasonable cost basis and report
the allocation for each candidate or local candidate.The report must list on separate schedules
any independent expenditures made on behalf of local candidates and any
expenditures made for ballot questions as defined in section 10A.01,
subdivision 7, clause (2), (3), or (4).

(i) The report must disclose the sum of all
expenditures made by or on behalf of the reporting entity during the reporting
period.

(j) The report must disclose the amount and
nature of an advance of credit incurred by the reporting entity, continuously
reported until paid or forgiven.If an
advance of credit incurred by the principal campaign committee of a candidate
is forgiven by the creditor or paid by an entity other than that principal
campaign committee, it must be reported as a donation in kind for the year in
which the advance of credit was made.

(k) The report must disclose the name,
address, and registration number if registered with the board of each political
committee, political fund, principal campaign committee, local candidate,
or party unit to which contributions have been made that aggregate in excess of
$200 within the year and the amount and date of each contribution.The report must list on separate schedules
any contributions made to state candidates' principal campaign committees and
any contributions made to local candidates.

(l) The report must disclose the sum of all
contributions made by the reporting entity during the reporting period and
must separately disclose the sum of all contributions made to local candidates
by the reporting entity during the reporting period.

(m) The report must disclose the name,
address, and registration number if registered with the board of each individual
or association to whom noncampaign disbursements have been made that aggregate
in excess of $200 within the year by or on behalf of the reporting entity and
the amount, date, and purpose of each noncampaign disbursement, including an
explanation of how the expenditure was used.

(n) The report must disclose the sum of all
noncampaign disbursements made within the year by or on behalf of the reporting
entity.

(o) The report must disclose the name and
address of a nonprofit corporation that provides administrative assistance to a
political committee or political fund as authorized by section 211B.15,
subdivision 17, the type of administrative assistance provided, and the
aggregate fair market value of each type of assistance provided to the political
committee or political fund during the reporting period.

(p) Legislative, statewide, and judicial
candidates, party units, and political committees and funds must itemize
contributions that in aggregate within the year exceed $200 for legislative or
statewide candidates or more than $500 for ballot questions on reports
submitted to the board.The itemization
must include the date on which the contribution was received, the individual or
association that provided the contribution, and the address of the contributor.Additionally, the itemization for a donation
in kind must provide a description of the item or service received.Contributions that are less than the
itemization amount must be reported as an aggregate total.

(q) Legislative, statewide, and judicial candidates, party
units, political committees and funds, and committees to promote or defeat a
ballot question must itemize expenditures and noncampaign disbursements that in
aggregate exceed $200 in a calendar year on reports submitted to the board.The itemization must include the date on
which

Journal of
the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1045

the
committee made or became obligated to make the expenditure or disbursement, the
name and address of the vendor that provided the service or item purchased, and
a description of the service or item purchased, including an explanation of how
the expenditure was used.Expenditures
and noncampaign disbursements must be listed on the report alphabetically by
vendor.

Subd. 6a.Statement
of independence.An individual,
political committee, political fund, or party unit filing a report or statement
disclosing an independent expenditure under subdivision 3 or 6 must file with
the report a sworn statement that the disclosed expenditures were not made with
the authorization or expressed or implied consent of, or in cooperation or in
concert with, or at the request or suggestion of any candidate;or
any candidate's principal campaign committee or agent; any local candidate,
or any local candidate's agent.

Subdivision 1.Hennepin
County candidates.Sections
383B.041 to 383B.058 apply to the financing of campaigns for county elections
in Hennepin County and for city elections in home rule charter cities and
statutory cities located wholly within Hennepin County, having a population of
75,000 or more, and for school board elections in the Special School District No. 1,
Minneapolis, and to disclosure of economic interests by candidates and elected
public officials of those jurisdictions.The provisions of sections 211A.02 to 211A.07 do not apply to the financing
of campaigns for elections subject to the provisions of sections 383B.041 to
383B.058.Candidates for county
commissioner, county attorney, and sheriff of Hennepin County must file
campaign disclosure forms with the filing officer for Hennepin County.These candidates are subject to the
provisions of chapter 211A.

Subd. 2.Political
subdivision candidates.Candidates
for elected city, school board, park commissioner, and other political
subdivision offices within Hennepin County shall file campaign disclosure forms
with the filing officer for the political subdivision for which the candidate
is seeking office.These candidates are
subject to the provisions of chapter 211A.

Subd. 3.Political
committees, political funds, and independent expenditures.(a) The provisions of chapter 10A
apply to political committees as defined in section 10A.01, subdivision 27;
political funds as defined in section 10A.01, subdivision 28; and independent
expenditures as defined in section 10A.01, subdivision 18, related to:

(1) a campaign for the nomination or
election of a candidate for:

(i) a county office in Hennepin County;

(ii) a city office in a home rule
charter or statutory city located wholly within Hennepin County with a
population of 75,000 or more; or

(iii) the school board in Special
School District No. 1; and

(2) a ballot question or proposition
that may be voted on by:

(i) all voters in Hennepin County;

(ii) all voters of a home rule charter
or statutory city located wholly within Hennepin County and having a population
of 75,000 or more; or

Journal
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(iii)
all voters in Special School District No. 1.

(b) The provisions of chapter 211A
apply to a campaign for nomination or election for an office in the following
political subdivisions:

(1) a home rule or statutory city
located wholly within Hennepin County and having a population of less than
75,000; and

(2) a school district located wholly
within Hennepin County other than Special School District No. 1.

(c) The provisions of chapter 211A
apply to a ballot question or proposition that may be voted on by:

(1) all voters of a home rule or
statutory city located wholly within Hennepin County and having a population of
less than 75,000; and

(2)
all voters of a school district located wholly within Hennepin County other
than Special School District No. 1.

Subd. 4.Local
ordinances and charters superseded.This
section supersedes the provisions of any ordinance or resolution of a political
subdivision within Hennepin County, or any existing special law or home rule
charter provision of a political subdivision within Hennepin County requiring
disclosure of information related to the financing of election campaigns.

Subd. 5.Economic
interest disclosure; Special School District No. 1.Every candidate for school board in
Special School District No. 1, Minneapolis, must file an original
statement of economic interest with the school district within 14 days of the
filing of an affidavit or petition to appear on the ballot.An elected official in Special School
District No. 1, Minneapolis, must file the annual statement required in
section 10A.09, subdivision 6, with the school district for every year that the
individual serves in office.An original
and annual statement must contain the information listed in section 10A.09,
subdivision 5.The provisions of section
10A.09, subdivisions 6a, 7, and 9, apply to statements required under this
subdivision.

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be placed on the General Register.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 2056, A bill for
an act relating to state government; modifying a provision in the state
solicitation process; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 16C.10,
subdivision 2.

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 2057, A bill for
an act relating to state government; allowing the commissioner or a nationally
recognized certifying organization to certify small businesses for
participation in state procurement programs; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018,
section 16C.19.

Reported the same back with the
recommendation that the bill be re-referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The
report was adopted.

Freiberg from the
Committee on Government Operations to which was referred:

H. F. No. 2399, A bill for an act relating
to human services; public safety; appropriating money for a grant to the
research-respond-refer program to provide crisis intervention training to peace
officers.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1051

Hamilton
introduced:

H. F. No. 2402, A bill for an act relating
to taxation; sales and use; providing a construction exemption for a wastewater
treatment facility in the city of Windom; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018,
sections 297A.71, by adding a subdivision; 297A.75, subdivision 1.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Taxes.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Taxes.

Huot and Zerwas introduced:

H. F. No. 2405, A bill for an act relating
to public safety; appropriating money for medical resource control centers.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Gunther and Torkelson introduced:

H. F. No. 2406, A bill for an act relating
to workforce development; appropriating money for a grant to Big Ideas, Inc.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1052

Green
introduced:

H. F. No. 2407, A bill for an act relating
to arts and culture; appropriating money for youth programs related to skilled
trades.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Persell, Gomez and Hassan introduced:

H. F. No. 2408, A bill for an act relating
to workforce development; appropriating money for a grant to the American
Indian Opportunities and Industrialization Center.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Hansen and Claflin introduced:

H. F. No. 2409, A bill for an act relating
to economic development; appropriating money for a grant to an economically
depressed city.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Haley introduced:

H. F. No. 2410, A bill for an act relating
to capital investment; appropriating money for Cannon Valley Trail access and
storm water infrastructure renovation and improvement; authorizing the sale and
issuance of state bonds.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Xiong, J., introduced:

H. F. No. 2411, A bill for an act relating
to capital investment; appropriating money to remove and replace the Third
Street/Kellogg Boulevard bridge in St. Paul; authorizing the sale and issuance
of state bonds.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Xiong, J., introduced:

H. F. No. 2412, A bill for an act relating
to capital investment; appropriating money to remove and replace the Third
Street/Kellogg Boulevard bridge in St. Paul.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Moran introduced:

H. F. No. 2413, A bill for an act relating
to economic development; appropriating money for a grant to the Rondo Community
Land Trust.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1053

Liebling
introduced:

H. F. No. 2414, A bill for an act relating
to human services; adjusting appropriations for certain forecasted programs
administered by the commissioner of human services.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1055

Wolgamott,
Persell, Brand and Bernardy introduced:

H. F. No. 2426, A bill for an act relating
to higher education; establishing a pilot program testing inclusive access for
the distribution of postsecondary textbooks; requiring a report; appropriating
money.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Bierman, Huot and Her introduced:

H. F. No. 2427, A bill for an act relating
to higher education; creating a grant program for postsecondary institutions
offering graduate training for teachers of concurrent enrollment courses;
requiring reports; appropriating money; proposing coding for new law in
Minnesota Statutes, chapter 136A.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1057

Davids
introduced:

H. F. No. 2438, A bill for an act relating
to public safety; establishing requirements to set salaries for Minnesota State
Patrol troopers; requiring the state auditor to conduct an annual compensation
survey; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 299D.03, subdivision 2, by
adding a subdivision.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Quam introduced:

H. F. No. 2439, A bill for an act relating
to government accountability; providing for state and local government
settlement accountability and transparency; requiring reports; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 13.43, subdivision 8; proposing coding for new
law in Minnesota Statutes, chapters 3; 15; 465.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Government Operations.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.

Lucero introduced:

H. F. No. 2448, A bill for an act relating
to public safety; requiring Department of Public Safety to include the cause of
damage sustained by a motor vehicle on a salvage certificate of title; amending
Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 168A.151, subdivision 1.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Transportation Finance and Policy Division.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1059

Elkins
introduced:

H. F. No. 2450, A bill for an act relating
to health care; requiring the commissioner of human services to implement a
plan to eliminate duplicate personal identification numbers for medical
assistance enrollees; requiring a report.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy.

Hansen, Cantrell, Lillie and Lee
introduced:

H. F. No. 2451, A bill for an act relating
to health; establishing a substance use disorder and alcohol abuse prevention
account; appropriating money; proposing coding for new law in Minnesota
Statutes, chapters 144; 254B.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Dehn and Davnie introduced:

H. F. No. 2452, A bill for an act relating
to professional licensing; requiring licensed professional engineers to earn
professional development hours dedicated to the impact of climate change;
amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section 326.107, subdivision 1.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Commerce.

Scott, Koznick, Runbeck, Neu, Bennett and
Johnson introduced:

H. F. No. 2453, A bill for an act relating
to public safety; increasing penalties for transferring certain firearms to
persons who are ineligible to possess firearms; amending Minnesota Statutes
2018, section 624.7141.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Government Operations.

Persell introduced:

H. F. No. 2457, A bill for an act relating
to human services; directing the commissioner of human services to make
recommendations for substance use disorder treatment provider paperwork
reduction and systems improvement.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Health and Human Services Policy.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Howard introduced:

H. F. No. 2460, A bill for an act relating
to public safety; establishing a Peace Officer Excellence Task Force.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

Garofalo introduced:

H. F. No. 2461, A bill for an act relating
to environment; allowing a city within five miles of the border of a solid
waste management district or county to opt out of a solid waste processing or
disposal facility designation; amending Minnesota Statutes 2018, section
115A.86, subdivision 1.

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Environment and Natural Resources Policy.

Journal
of the House - 21st Day - Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1061

The bill was read for the first time and
referred to the Committee on Ways and Means.

REPORT
FROM THE COMMITTEE ON RULES

AND
LEGISLATIVE ADMINISTRATION

Winkler from the Committee on Rules and
Legislative Administration, pursuant to rules 1.21 and 3.33, designated the
following bill to be placed on the Calendar for the Day for Thursday, March 14,
2019 and established a prefiling requirement for amendments offered to the
following bill:

H. F. No. 349.

MOTIONS AND
RESOLUTIONS

Brand moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 85.The motion prevailed.

Gunther moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 120.The motion prevailed.

Grossell moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 172.The motion prevailed.

Dettmer moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 204.The motion prevailed.

Dettmer moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 205.The motion prevailed.

Dettmer moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 213.The motion prevailed.

Albright moved that the name of Elkins be
added as an author on H. F. No. 306.The motion prevailed.

Becker-Finn moved that the name of Claflin
be added as an author on H. F. No. 359.The motion prevailed.

Morrison moved that the name of Robbins be
added as an author on H. F. No. 440.The motion prevailed.

Howard moved that the name of Freiberg be
added as an author on H. F. No. 485.The motion prevailed.

Schultz moved that the names of Mann and
Noor be added as authors on H. F. No. 533.The motion prevailed.

Journal of the House - 21st Day -
Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1063

Becker-Finn moved that the names of
Boe and Poston be added as authors on H. F. No. 586.The motion prevailed.

Long moved that the name of Gomez be added
as an author on H. F. No. 689.The motion prevailed.

McDonald moved that the name of Backer be
added as an author on H. F. No. 709.The motion prevailed.

Mariani moved that the names of Poston and
Loeffler be added as authors on H. F. No. 717.The motion prevailed.

Lee moved that the name of Bahner be added
as an author on H. F. No. 721.The motion prevailed.

Mann moved that the names of Brand and
Poston be added as authors on H. F. No. 728.The motion prevailed.

Loeffler moved that the names of Bernardy
and Backer be added as authors on H. F. No. 763.The motion prevailed.

Lislegard moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 826.The motion prevailed.

Quam moved that the names of Lucero and
Nornes be added as authors on H. F. No. 855.The motion prevailed.

Her moved that her name be stricken as an
author on H. F. No. 880.The motion prevailed.

Schultz moved that the names of
Richardson; Mann; Xiong, J.; Xiong, T.; Vang and Noor be added as authors on
H. F. No. 884.The motion
prevailed.

Hansen moved that the name of Backer be
added as an author on H. F. No. 949.The motion prevailed.

Bernardy moved that the name of Heinrich
be added as an author on H. F. No. 988.The motion prevailed.

Long moved that the name of Gomez be added
as an author on H. F. No. 997.The motion prevailed.

Zerwas moved that the name of Heintzeman
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1000.The motion prevailed.

Cantrell moved that the name of Gomez be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1049.The motion prevailed.

Persell moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1063.The motion prevailed.

Wazlawik moved that the name of Layman be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1096.The motion prevailed.

Lesch moved that the name of McDonald be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1115.The motion prevailed.

Fischer moved that the name of Noor be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1138.The motion prevailed.

Lesch moved that the name of Tabke be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1140.The motion prevailed.

Tabke moved that the name of Bahner be added
as an author on H. F. No. 1142.The motion prevailed.

Tabke moved that the names of Xiong, J.,
and Bahner be added as authors on H. F. No. 1156.The motion prevailed.

Ecklund moved that the name of Poston be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1189. The motion prevailed.

Journal of the House - 21st Day -
Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1064

Daudt moved that the name of Lucero
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1210.The motion prevailed.

Considine moved that the name of
Schomacker be added as an author on H. F. No. 1254.The motion prevailed.

Cantrell moved that the name of Olson be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1256.The motion prevailed.

Cantrell moved that the names of Brand and
Poston be added as authors on H. F. No. 1257.The motion prevailed.

Hassan moved that the name of Gomez be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1330.The motion prevailed.

Wazlawik moved that the name of Baker be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1341.The motion prevailed.

Erickson moved that the name of McDonald
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1370.The motion prevailed.

Freiberg moved that the names of Brand and
Garofalo be added as authors on H. F. No. 1397.The motion prevailed.

Sandstede moved that the name of Anderson
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1520.The motion prevailed.

Morrison moved that the name of Albright
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1535.The motion prevailed.

Gomez moved that the name of Long be added
as an author on H. F. No. 1620.The motion prevailed.

Gomez moved that the name of Long be added
as an author on H. F. No. 1638.The motion prevailed.

Long moved that the name of Gomez be added
as an author on H. F. No. 1644.The motion prevailed.

Schultz moved that the name of Cantrell be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1659.The motion prevailed.

Hassan moved that her name be stricken as
an author on H. F. No. 1666.The motion prevailed.

Scott moved that the name of Sundin be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1666.The motion prevailed.

Youakim moved that the name of Wazlawik be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1711.The motion prevailed.

Long moved that the name of Gomez be added
as an author on H. F. No. 1753.The motion prevailed.

Sandstede moved that the name of Xiong,
J., be added as an author on H. F. No. 1769.The motion prevailed.

Youakim moved that the name of Gruenhagen
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1782.The motion prevailed.

Loeffler moved that the name of Koegel be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1802.The motion prevailed.

Ecklund moved that the names of O'Neill,
Quam, McDonald and Schomacker be added as authors on
H. F. No. 1839.The
motion prevailed.

Pierson moved that the name of Bahner be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1861.The motion prevailed.

Wolgamott moved that the name of Franson
be added as an author on H. F. No. 1871.The motion prevailed.

Hassan moved that the name of Gomez be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1898.The motion prevailed.

Journal of the House - 21st Day -
Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1065

Hansen moved that the names of
Klevorn and Lippert be added as authors on H. F. No. 1908.The motion prevailed.

Moller moved that the names of Tabke and
Lillie be added as authors on H. F. No. 1955.The motion prevailed.

Long moved that the name of Gomez be added
as an author on H. F. No. 1956.The motion prevailed.

Davids moved that his name be stricken as
an author on H. F. No. 1963.The motion prevailed.

Poppe moved that the name of Miller be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1965.The motion prevailed.

Lesch moved that the name of Liebling be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1971.The motion prevailed.

Noor moved that the name of Loeffler be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1981.The motion prevailed.

Huot moved that the name of Backer be
added as an author on H. F. No. 1993.The motion prevailed.

Lippert moved that the name of Howard be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2033.The motion prevailed.

Lee moved that the name of Bahner be added
as an author on H. F. No. 2059.The motion prevailed.

Hansen moved that the names of Dehn and
Lippert be added as authors on H. F. No. 2070.The motion prevailed.

Marquart moved that the name of Loeffler
be added as an author on H. F. No. 2125.The motion prevailed.

Pryor moved that the name of Layman be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2131.The motion prevailed.

Klevorn moved that the name of Zerwas be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2182.The motion prevailed.

Elkins moved that the name of Klevorn be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2194.The motion prevailed.

Mariani moved that the name of
Kunesh-Podein be added as an author on H. F. No. 2243.The motion prevailed.

Gomez moved that the name of Munson be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2249.The motion prevailed.

Carlson, A., moved that the name of
O'Driscoll be added as an author on H. F. No. 2290.The motion prevailed.

Long moved that the name of Gomez be added
as an author on H. F. No. 2294.The motion prevailed.

Hansen moved that the names of Lesch,
Mariani and Claflin be added as authors on H. F. No. 2303.The motion prevailed.

Long moved that the name of Gomez be added
as an author on H. F. No. 2304.The motion prevailed.

Vogel moved that the names of Demuth,
Theis, Scott and Lucero be added as authors on
H. F. No. 2312.The
motion prevailed.

Jurgens moved that the names of Scott,
Kiel and Haley be added as authors on H. F. No. 2317.The motion prevailed.

Journal of the House - 21st Day -
Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1066

Lee moved that the names of Vang and
Gomez be added as authors on H. F. No. 2325.The motion prevailed.

Moran moved that the name of Morrison be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2334.The motion prevailed.

Lueck moved that the names of Ecklund,
Lislegard and Sandstede be added as authors on
H. F. No. 2339.The
motion prevailed.

Sandstede moved that the name of Robbins
be added as an author on H. F. No. 2340.The motion prevailed.

Bennett moved that the name of Scott be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2352.The motion prevailed.

Dehn moved that the name of Hausman be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2360.The motion prevailed.

Moller moved that the name of Xiong, J.,
be added as an author on H. F. No. 2363.The motion prevailed.

Pryor moved that the name of Xiong, J., be
added as an author on H. F. No. 2366.The motion prevailed.

Wolgamott moved that the name of Runbeck
be added as an author on H. F. No. 2377.The motion prevailed.

Runbeck moved that the names of Lucero and
Scott be added as authors on H. F. No. 2392.The motion prevailed.

Scott moved that
H. F. No. 5 be recalled from the Committee on Ways and Means and
be re-referred to the Committee on Commerce.

A roll call was requested and properly
seconded.

The question was taken on the Scott motion
and the roll was called.There were 57
yeas and 70 nays as follows:

Those who voted in the affirmative were:

Albright

Anderson

Bahr

Baker

Bennett

Boe

Daniels

Daudt

Davids

Demuth

Dettmer

Drazkowski

Erickson

Fabian

Franson

Garofalo

Green

Grossell

Gruenhagen

Gunther

Haley

Hamilton

Heinrich

Heintzeman

Hertaus

Johnson

Jurgens

Kiel

Koznick

Kresha

Layman

Lucero

Lueck

Mann

McDonald

Mekeland

Miller

Munson

Nash

Neu

Nornes

O'Driscoll

O'Neill

Petersburg

Pierson

Poston

Quam

Robbins

Runbeck

Schomacker

Scott

Swedzinski

Theis

Torkelson

Urdahl

Vogel

Zerwas

Those who voted in the negative were:

Acomb

Bahner

Becker-Finn

Bernardy

Bierman

Brand

Carlson, A.

Carlson, L.

Christensen

Claflin

Considine

Davnie

Dehn

Ecklund

Edelson

Elkins

Fischer

Freiberg

Gomez

Hansen

Hassan

Hausman

Her

Hornstein

Howard

Huot

Klevorn

Koegel

Kotyza-Witthuhn

Kunesh-Podein

Lee

Lesch

Liebling

Lien

Lillie

Lippert

Lislegard

Loeffler

Long

Mahoney

Marquart

Masin

Moller

Moran

Morrison

Murphy

Nelson

Noor

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Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1067

Olson

Pelowski

Persell

Pinto

Poppe

Pryor

Richardson

Sandell

Sandstede

Sauke

Schultz

Stephenson

Sundin

Tabke

Vang

Wagenius

Wazlawik

Winkler

Wolgamott

Xiong, T.

Youakim

Spk. Hortman

The motion did
not prevail.

ADJOURNMENT

Winkler moved that when the House adjourns
today it adjourn until 3:30 p.m., Thursday, March 14, 2019.The motion prevailed.

Winkler moved that the House adjourn.The motion prevailed, and the Speaker
declared the House stands adjourned until 3:30 p.m., Thursday, March 14, 2019.

Patrick
D. Murphy, Chief
Clerk, House of Representatives

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Wednesday, March 13, 2019 - Top of Page 1068